Frederic A. Gibbs
978-613-3-82012-8
6133820128
72
2010-11-04
29,00 €
eng
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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Frederic Andrews Gibbs was an American neurologist who was a pioneer in the use of electroencephalography for the diagnosis and treatment of epilepsy. Gibbs graduated from Yale and Johns Hopkins in 1929. He was offered a fellowship in neuropathology by Stanley Cobb, of Harvard Medical School. He studied epilepsy in the same laboratory as William G. Lennox and Erna Leonhardt. Erna Leonhardt was Lennox's technical co-worker and had come to Boston as an immigrant from Germany. She married Gibbs in 1930 and they formed a research team that would last a lifetime, publishing papers together over the next fifty-odd years. The electroencephalograph was primitive in the early 1930s, having only one channel. In 1935, Gibbs asked Albert Grass to build a 3-channel EEG. Grass built the machine in his father's basement with the help of his brother. In the same year, Erna and Frederic Gibbs travelled to Europe to attend a conference and visit Hans Berger, the inventor of the EEG.
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